one of my most stunning experiences was NI's B4 Hammond which did sound exactly the same played through a SoundBlaster (the PCI ultra-cheapo) and my PulsarOne.On 2004-02-11 22:49, Spirit wrote:
...And whatever you do you'll need a soundcard, and if you're serious about sound then you'll want to get a good one...

I swear it was impossible, but it was easy to distinguish the B4 from CWA's B2003, so I cannot be totally dumb.
The controversary between DSP and CPU processing originates (imho) mostly from statements by CPU-only users who call people 'idiots' to spent a lot of cash on 'unnecessary and outdated equipment'.
They believe in superior processing power (it's newer, so it must be...) by reading totally irrelevant numbers.
The 'power' of a progam depends on how smart it's implemented - and if you look at those piles of code that cannot be smart at all.
You have to face the fact that unless someone rewrites an essential part of the libraries currently used to progam native stuff there won't be any improvement in sound quality.
You can process crap with 12 GHZ - it will remain crap because it's inherent.
THAT has nothing to do with native versus DSP coding.
It's just a matter of general software quality.
cheers, Tom